Eleven days into free agency, the Mavericks are still sitting on the two biggest tools they have to improve the roster: the $20.8 million Traded-Player Exception from the Anthony Davis trade and their Non-Taxpayer's Mid-Level Exception.
Those are not small chips. The TPE gives Dallas the ability to absorb a player making up to $20.8 million, but it can’t be split up to bring in multiple players. The MLE works differently, letting the Mavericks sign a player outright as long as the salary comes in under roughly $15 million annually.
And with the roster still looking incomplete, those exceptions can’t just sit there unused.
Dallas has time before training camp, but the front office still needs to make sure one of those avenues gets used before the season starts. The current group has a clear imbalance: too many wings and not enough help in the backcourt. Counting the two-way players, the Mavericks have 11 players who can play on the wing, but they badly need guard depth with Kyrie Irving returning from a torn ACL and now 34 years old.
That need has already shown up in the market. Dallas has missed out on some of the better guard options in free agency, including Anfernee Simons.
The Mavericks have made a few moves that help in other areas. They signed Tarik Biberovic to a standard deal and acquired Santi Aldama in a trade with the Memphis Grizzlies. Both players should help with shooting, but neither one solves the roster’s biggest structural issue.
The priority has to be talent, of course. But Dallas also can’t ignore the shape of its roster, especially with its 2027 first-round pick already gone. Overloading one spot and leaving obvious holes elsewhere would be a poor use of the flexibility created by the Davis deal.
That’s the larger point here: the Anthony Davis trade in February was supposed to create room for Dallas to maneuver. If the Mavericks end up not using the TPE or the MLE that deal opened up, it would amount to a major waste of assets.
For now, it’s still early enough in the summer that there’s no reason to panic. But the Mavericks’ shot creation and playmaking are not going to fix themselves just because Irving comes back. Dallas needs another move, and it needs to come from the tools already in hand.
At this stage, the TPE looks like the more realistic path than the MLE. There simply aren’t many free agents left who seem likely to command that kind of money, especially among guards.
There has also been talk that Dallas could save the TPE for next season’s trade deadline. Still, if the Mavericks don’t use the MLE, then the TPE has to be used this summer.
There are other routes to improvement. Dallas could trade one of its veterans on a bigger contract, such as Klay Thompson, Naji Marshall, P.J.
Washington or Daniel Gafford. But none of those options is as clean as using the MLE or taking a player into the TPE.
The Mavericks created this flexibility for a reason. If they let it go to waste, it would be hard to call that anything but a misstep.
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The Lakers quietly cleaned up a batch of old roster paperwork this week, officially renouncing the free agent rights to Jared Dudley and a long list of other former players. For Dallas fans, Dudleys name still carries a familiar ring because he spent time on the Mavericks bench after retiring from playing, and his path through the league has kept him connected to some of the same circles that once overlapped with Luka Doncic in Dallas.
The move is mostly procedural at this point, since Dudley has been out of the playing ranks for years and has long since moved into coaching. Still, it formally severs the last contractual tie between him and the Lakers, which is the kind of transaction that barely registers around the league but can catch the eye when a former Mavericks assistant shows up in the fine print. [Read more 🡒]
